Pubdate: Wed, 30 Sep 2009 Source: Chicago Tribune (IL) Copyright: 2009 Chicago Tribune Company Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/IuiAC7IZ Website: http://www.chicagotribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/82 Author: Clarence Page Note: Clarence Page is a member of the Tribune's editorial board and blogs at chicagotribune.com/pagespage VIOLENCE VIDEOS SPUR BAD POLITICS Americans are shocked by youth violence -- again. What a difference videos make. The fatal beating of a South Side teenager shocks the world, as it should. Yet the real tragedy differs little from a trail of similar kid-on-kid violence, except that it was caught on video. We easily become benumbed after years of tragic headlines about youth violence. Then we get jerked alert by the horrific video images of youths fatally beating 16-year-old Derrion Albert, an honor roll student at Fenger High School. In our horror it is natural for us to look for someone to blame besides the suspects that police have rounded up with the help of the video that the Internet beams around the planet. It just happens to be the bad fortune of President Barack Obama and Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley that this tragedy coincides with their efforts to woo the International Olympic Committee, which decides Friday whether Chicago will beat out Rio, Tokyo and Madrid to host the 2016 Olympics. As Richard Nixon once said of presidential campaigns, there are no silver medals in this race. The competition for the games is intense and so is the opposition in Chicago. Chicagoans were about evenly split on hosting the games, according to a recent Chicago Tribune poll. The Internet crackles with critics of the Olympics, Daley, Obama or all three. Some raise the death of Derrion Albert and other young victims of school or street violence to argue Chicago might be too unsafe, too corrupt or too indifferent to the plight of its poor to host the Olympics. Unsafe? Compared to ... Rio? Here's an Associated Press account of life in Rio during a week in early September: A police shootout "stopped a commuter train and sent passengers fleeing for cover." Officers conducted a drug raid on a slum, "keeping 2,000 children out of school." Police gun battles "killed more than a dozen suspected traffickers." Yet that was the same week the IOC released a report that gave high praise to Rio's bid for the 2016 Games. The sad fact is that most of the violence that plagues metropolises like Rio or Chicago occurs in parts of town to which tourists do not usually go. Tragically, this makes the pain of poverty and violence too easily ignored by those who could do something about it. Yet video and the Web have the power to break down the emotional walls that separate communities from one another, even when they transmit a misleading message. For example, those who are moved by video to judge Chicago's liveability are no more ridiculous than Rush Limbaugh's recent rant after Matt Drudge's Drudge Report Web site posted another video of youth violence: a school bus security camera in downstate Illinois captured a black kid pounding on a white kid in the next seat. Police reported, but then discounted the possibility, that the incident was a hate crime. But Limbaugh was not deterred by a mere lack of evidence. "Greetings, my friends. It's Obama's America, is it not?" he bellowed. "Obama's America -- white kids getting beat up on school buses now. I mean, you put your kids on a school bus, you expect safety, but in Obama's America, the white kids now get beat up with the black kids cheering, 'Yeah, right on, right on, right on!' " Note to Rush: Most black youths have not exclaimed "right on" since the days when you and I were young. The truth is that race has little to do with youth violence compared to the impact of poverty and the disconnection from hope. There is good news happening in some violence-plagued neighborhoods, even if it occurs too quietly to get as much media attention as the violence does. A variety of neighborhood-based programs have shown real success in reducing youth violence. One leading example is the "violence-free zones" that police and school officials in Milwaukee, Baltimore, Atlanta, Dallas and Richmond, Va., have organized with assistance from the Washington-based Center for Neighborhood Enterprise. "The Chicago tragedy is part of a plague sweeping the country," said Robert Woodson, the center's founder and president. "Kids are targeted not for being in a gang but for coming from a different neighborhood." The key to a "violence-free zone," as Woodson explains it, is adult "youth advisers" who have enough local connections and street savvy to win the trust of teens, yet who also can pass rigorous background checks. Effective "advisers" build enough trust to serve as "antibodies" in a toxic atmosphere, so kids will alert them to looming troubles without fear of being stigmatized as a "snitch." In other words, before we waste our breath spouting off about what our kids need, it pays to listen to the kids. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake